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pynoddy 0.1

pynoddy is a python package to write, change, and analyse kinematic geological modelling simulations performed with Noddy (see below for more infomration on Noddy).

How does it work?-----------------

At this stage, pynoddy provides wrapper modules for existing Noddy history (.his) and result files (.g00, etc.). It is

Installation-------------

To install pynoddy simply run:

python setup.py install

Note:

- sufficient priviledges are required (i.e. run in sudo with MacOSX/ Linux and set permissions on Windows)

Important: the Noddy executable has to be in a directory defined in the PATH variable!!

Documentation-------------

Tutorial--------

A tutorial starting with simple examples for changing the geological history and visualisation of output, as well as the implementation of stochastic simulations and uncertainty visualisation are available as interactive ipython notebooks:

These notebooks are also included in the documentation as non-interactive versions.

Dependencies------------

pynoddy depends on several standard Python packages that should be shipped with any standard distribution (and are easy to install, otherwise):

. numpy. matplotlib. pickle

The uncertainty anaysis, quantification, and visualisation methods based on information theory are implemented in the python package pygeoinfo. This package is available on github and part of the python package index. It is automatically installed with the setup script provided with this package. For more information, please see:

(todo: include package info!)

In addition, to export model results for full 3-D visualisation with VTK, the pyevtk package is used, available on bitbucket:

https://bitbucket.org/pauloh/pyevtk/src/9c19e3a54d1e?at=v0.1.0

License-------

pynoddy is free software and published under a MIT license (see license file included in the repository). Please attribute the work when you use it, feel free to change and adapt it otherwise!

What is Noddy?-------------

Noddy itself is a kinematic modelling program written by Mark Jessell [1] to simulate the effect of subsequent geological events (folding, unconformities, faulting, etc.) on a primary sedimentary pile. A typical example would be: